
Hugh Howey discussed this in a recent post in which he said, “The lie that a good novel takes five years to write needs to die. There’s no correlation between how much an author procrastinates and how wonderfully literary their creation turns out to be.”
My concern with this myth is that aspiring writers believe in it and then don’t get started because the
mountain seems insurmountable. Yesterday, a friend wrote telling me that she
was too busy with life to write, even though she really wanted to pursue this career. She’d
hoped that somewhere in the distant future (you know that place, it’s very
magical) she would find the time.
Let me set those
writers straight who don’t know this secret. That place in the distant future where you are
looking for time, well, it doesn’t exist. To demonstrate how to find a better place, a
more flexible place, I thought it would be a fun little exercise to share a week of my recent life when I wrote an 11,000-word short story. It will
also serve as my contribution to stabbing the stupid myth that successful writers
have a cozy office where they get to sit all day and drink coffee, in order to produce
their works of carefully crafted prose. If
that does ever happen to you I suggest you look out for the pigs flying by the windows.

First, I’ve been tagged in a blog hop by my Aussie mate Mel Hearse. Well she was my mate until she started telling everyone that her story in our anthology FROM THE INDIE SIDE is better than mine. But you will need to buy FROM THE INDIE SIDE to decide for yourself. I’m going to quickly answer the blog hop questions and then get on to that myth.
How does your work differ from others in its
genre?
I try
and write something different from anything I’ve read or seen in a film. My
mother once said to me while I sweated a high school English writing assignment,
“Imagine what everyone else will write and then write something completely different.”
So that’s always my plan.
I follow the illusionist’s tricks with my surprise endings, too. While a reader is over here distracted by the action and thinking they know what’s going on, they are exactly where I want them. Meanwhile I’m over here with the real truth that they hopefully won’t see coming. It’s a sleight of hand with words. I love writing it, while imagining the pleasure the reader will enjoy from the ending.
I follow the illusionist’s tricks with my surprise endings, too. While a reader is over here distracted by the action and thinking they know what’s going on, they are exactly where I want them. Meanwhile I’m over here with the real truth that they hopefully won’t see coming. It’s a sleight of hand with words. I love writing it, while imagining the pleasure the reader will enjoy from the ending.
Why do I write what I do?
Zero choice. I love
sci-fi, horror and anything strange. Somehow my brain is programmed
that way, most likely from all the horror stories I read and watched as a child.
Twilight Zone and Alfred Hitchcock had a huge impact on me. Where my
imagination goes, I’m merely a passenger and am forced to follow and take
notes. Very quickly, usually.
How does my writing process work?

At the end I’m always shocked that I worked out the story arc and the ending and found a good twist. Of course, there is a bit of rewriting at times to clean up what I didn’t know in the beginning to make it match the ending. There is rarely a great deal to do. When I actually attempt to work something out in my head, outside physically writing it, I can’t. My mind is a blank.
That is the
conclusion of the blog hop. Now onto…
Stomping on the
lie that you have no time to write or that you need years to write a novel if
it’s going to be quality.

I’m not doing this to
say, “Look at me. Aren’t I a hero?” If I wanted that I would tell you that I
slave over my keyboard, need quiet because I am a genius, and that I bleed
every word. Some writers might and good luck to them, but that seriously does
not sound like fun, and it’s not how I feel when I write. Writing feels joyous
to me. It’s not work, and many times I feel like I am flying it’s so
liberating.
The first thing to know
is that I am a mom before anything else. I’ve got two “monster” boys, eleven
and thirteen. They argue A LOT, treat me like a slave, and seem to
have no clue that their parents are human beings with their own stuff. It’s all
about them. I try to teach them differently, but hey, that’s the nature of kids
these days, right? I drive the kids to and from school, and if they need me at
the school canteen or to help with anything, my hand is always up. How do you
teach your kids to be involved in the community if they don’t see you doing it?
Secondly, I'm a film and
book reviewer, so I go to a lot of movies (averaging about three to four a week).
I think my record was eight one week. Last
year I saw 134 films on screen. Then I have to write the reviews. Of course, I have to drive to the cinemas all
over Perth. So each film is a three to four hour round trip. I get in and out as quick as I can,
around chatting to my critic mates. We love talking film and, no, we don’t ever
get sick of it. Also eating into my time are promotions with book and film publicists involving the exchange of many daily emails.

Two weeks ago on Monday 17th February an author wrote to me asking if I could contribute a time travel story to an anthology. It needed to be submitted by the 30th March. (UPDATE July 2014: The story became "Back Again" but I decided, in the end, to not have it included in the anthology and it was published in early May 2014.)
Now I have a lot on
in the way of writing, a collection of short stories to assemble, a “Dust”
fanfic to edit that’s come back from my editor, and a booking late March for more work to be edited. On top of that, coming up last weekend was the
Perth Writer’s Festival where I had two speaking gigs.
But I love a challenge and I did have a time travel story that had kicked around in my head for several years that was just itching to be told.
How do I fit writing
this story in, which I hadn’t planned to write, when I have no time? I was only
halfway through creating my PowerPoint for my three hour workshop and the kids
had a lot on with sport. So here is how I wrote 11,000 good words alongside my
day-to-day other jobs—imagine constant chaos and interruption in the background, too.
Wednesday
19th Feb: Attended
13-year-old’s all day swim carnival. Took my laptop and in between races wrote 1400 words. A good start
Thursday
20th Feb: 9-11am Went for my swim-2.2km-and by the time I
wash my hair, blah, blah, there goes two hours.
11-
2pm Worked on my workshop, that was
a priority, so couldn’t do anything else. In between did all the other mom
stuff that you do and business emails, etc., etc..
2pm
to 2:50pm Managed to write another 800 words just
before school pickup. Total now 2200 words.
Friday
21st Feb: 11:30 Writer’s Festival interview hosted by
me with Joe Ducie and Chris Allen. It was great fun, and they are
awesome guys. Spies actually… shh, don’t tell anyone. I now know spies.
2:00pm Media screening across town of In A World. Rushed there, ate my lunch (leftovers) in the
dark (pretty stock standard for me).
5:00 pm
Took 11-year-old to indoor soccer and then across town to outdoor soccer
training until 7pm. Husband came along. I thought we could spend quality time
together while son was training. But no, I had to catch up on my twitter
account. Bad me.
9:00pm Children in bed and we just crashed. I wanted
to write, but my brain had started to switch off.
Saturday
22nd Feb: 10am
Slept in. Trundled over to son’s
all day soccer tournament in 37/100 degree heat. When he wasn’t playing I
wrote. Another 2,500 words. Total now 4,700 words
3pm Came
home and hung with thirteen-year-old. Watched two episodes of Walking Dead because he’s ahead of me
and he keeps bugging me to catch up. I was hot and happy to sit down for an
hour or so. Sheese that show is violent, though, ain’t it?
8pm Husband sat with me and checked
through my workshop to make sure it was coherent. He gave the thumbs up. It was
forty slides of good information on writer “discoverability.”
Sunday
23rd Feb: Lazy
morning. Posted my film reviews for the week. Enjoyed hanging out with my
family for late breakfast. Stopped the children from killing each other. Several
times.
2pm 3
hour workshop at the Perth Writer’s
Festival. Went well and attendees seemed to feel they learned a few
things. I learned something, too. Don’t
wear heels to conduct a 3 hour workshop.
6pm Back
into mom clothes, helped son fold pamphlets for his letterbox delivery round
(15 flyers folded together for 180 letterboxes). It had to be done by today.
7pm After
dinner walked our letterbox delivery round. We all do it for exercise and as a
family outing. Eleven-year-old kicks his soccer ball alongside, Dad does one
side of the street, I do the other, and the thirteen-year-old does the exterior
of the route because he has an electric scooter.
Monday 24th
Feb: 9-11am Went for my swim.
What seems like millions
of emails have accumulated since Friday. So has the washing. But I did manage
to scrawl out another 1,000 words. But I wasn’t
happy with the progress, because I felt it was going to be a longer story than
I’d expected and I wanted it done sooner than later. Total now 5700 Words
6:30pm Film screening Non-Stop. The whole family went.
11pm-1am Added another 2,000 words. I
know a lot of authors say they get up early to write or stay up until 4am. I can’t do that. I get really tired if I
don’t get 6 to 8 hours of sleep. Then the next day, I fall asleep at the
keyboard. So that option is only there occasionally to stay up late and usually
I don’t go past one am. Total now 7700 words.
Tuesday
25th Feb: 9am Mel
Hearse comes over for coffee first thing. She also has a story in the FROM THE INDIE
SIDE ANTHOLOGY (you really gotta buy it) I haven’t seen Mel for a few months
but we email and facebook all the time. (I can’t get rid of her. Does anyone
know how I can?) We had an unboxing to film of FROM THE INDIE SIDE. A box of the books had
just arrived on Thursday and this was the first chance we could get together.
11:30am
Film screening – Ride Along
1:30pm
Email and business stuff – no writing
Wednesday
26th Feb: Today
is the day. I have to get the story finished because I have other things coming
up.
9am Catch up on all my film reviews and
returning emails. I wrote six reviews
and replied to countless queries and writing related stuff (but not story writing).
1:30pm Put down another 1500 words before school pick
up. I am close to the end of the story
at around 9,200 words, but I still don’t know what’s going to happen, and I am
starting to worry. I want that big “wow” ending that you don’t see coming. But even
I don’t see it coming at this
moment.
4:30pm Husband comes home early and I
ask him to finish off dinner for me, while I go work on my story. He knows the
rule “Happy wife, happy life.”
6pm Husband
calls out that dinner is ready. Just ten
more minutes and I think I’m done. I found my ending, (and what an ending) and
I’m madly racing toward it.
6:15pm 1881 Words I join the family for dinner,
maybe eight minutes late from the final dinner call, but it’s done. I’ve typed
“The End” at 11,081 words (around 45 pages), and I really don’t feel as if I
broke a sweat.
Now if you extrapolate out that word count for five more weeks of barely doing anything, I would have a novel. This week was one of my very, very busy
weeks. This story is quality I believe, and by the time you read it in May after its edited several times and then fine-tooth combed by my fabulous editor, Peg, you
won’t be including this story in the “Tsunami of Crap” bag that
is hurled at indies.

Next
time you hear yourself saying “I don’t have any time” or you hear that tale
of authors taking years to write their masterpiece, think about this post. It’s not
that you don’t have time; it’s just that you haven’t learned to find it. It’s
hiding everywhere, you’ve just got to open your eyes and see it.
P.S. Update July 2014: I've just completed the novel, of the same name, from this short story. It took me five weeks to write it, based around the short story, and 4 and a half weeks to get the 85,000 word manuscript through two more drafts before sending it off to my lovely editors. In total, it's taken me 11 weeks to write and edit to a reasonably clean manuscript of 350 page book. I don't say this to be a smart-ass. Just to share that this trope of taking years to write a novel may not be true for everyone. I didn't think that I could write a book that quickly, that I actually had it in me. Turns out I did. Who knows, it might be in you, too.
Now back to the normal transmission... I'm meant to pass this lengthy, (I know I do go on) blog hop on to someone
else, but I don’t know to whom. Hellooo… hellooo… who is the next guy? Somebody email me, mental telepathy me,
something. Did I talk too long? Hellooooooo….
And
since nobody else is here, and while we are waiting for the next blog hopper
author, don’t forget to grab a copy of FROM
THE INDIE SIDE. It’s definitely not part of the “Tsunami of Crap” even
though we are indie authors and the twelve of us got that little baby out in
less than six months. If you would like a FREE copy of it to read so you can decide for yourself sign up formy newsletter by the 10th May, 2014.
Other stops on this blog hop from authors starring in FROM THE INDIE SIDE:
P.S. I've just heard from Peter Cawdron, who has joined the blog hop from the side. He's from Queensland, Australia and that's how they roll over there. It's the humidity we think-it does something to you. I was actually born in Brisbane, Queensland, and lived thee until I was 25, so I can share that the nickname for Queenslanders is "Banana Benders," and there is a reason for that. So, the next stop on this blog hop, that is hopping all over the place, is Ernie Lindsey, but you will hop there and find that you have arrived at Peter Cawdron's blog, where he interviews Ernie. See what I mean? You would expect that Peter interviews himself because that's what we all did. But we like to shake it up, folks. And we are indies so we can do whatever the heck we want to do. So hop over to Ernie's Peter Cawdron's blog and from there, well, you could end up anywhere. But isn't that the fun of it?
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